Concrete Canoe, Sustainable Solutions and Surveying Contest winners advance to compete in Society-wide contest in June at Louisiana Tech University

RESTON, Va. – The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) 2022 Mid-South Student Symposium took place at Arkansas State University March 31–April 2, 2022. At the event, nearly 260 civil engineering students from 13 universities in Arkansas and Tennessee, including one guest university, Harding University, put their academic and project management knowledge to the test participating in annual society-wide competitions including the ASCE Concrete Canoe and ASCE/UESI (Utility Engineering and Surveying Institute) Surveying Competition, ASCE Sustainable Solutions Competition – Tiny House Challenges, the ASCE Innovation Contest and the AISC (American Institute of Steel Construction)/ASCE Student Bridge Competition

The Lipscomb University team won the Concrete Canoe Competition, and the Christian Brothers University team won the UESI Surveying Competition. The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga won the ASCE Innovation Contest. The University of Arkansas team won the ASCE Sustainable Solutions Competition, however because they did not fulfil all the qualifications, the Vanderbilt team who placed second will advance to the finals. The Vanderbilt University team won the AISC/ASCE Student Bridge Competition, qualifying for the national competition May 27–28 at Virginia Tech University in Blacksburg, VA.

The qualified winning teams of the Concrete Canoe, Surveying and Sustainable Solutions competitions now move on to compete at the 35th Annual ASCE Society-wide Competitions June 3–5 at Louisiana Tech University in Ruston, LA. 

The ASCE Concrete Canoe competition requires students to collaborate as teams and use engineering skills to design and construct a seaworthy canoe made entirely of concrete. Each team must compete in multiple categories: Technical Proposal, Technical Presentation, Enhanced Focus Area, Final Product, and several racing events, for a chance to move on to the finals where the winner will compete against 23 other teams from schools around the globe.

The ASCE Sustainable Solutions Competition challenges students to develop a stronger understanding of sustainability and learn to incorporate sustainable solutions into everyday problems that engineers incur. Students are encouraged to be creative in their solutions and use all resources available. This year, students delve into a tiny-home community challenge to address homelessness.

The ASCE UESI Surveying Competition’s educational and professional goals include a recognition of the importance of basic surveying principles to all civil engineering projects. Students are required to use standard field and office equipment and procedures to solve common problems encountered in industry. A clear understanding of and ability to apply basic surveying principles will assist the graduate civil engineer in communicating and working with the surveying professionals on the job site and during the design process.

“Congratulations to all the winners of the ASCE Mid-South Student Symposia competitions,” said Dennis D. Truax, President of ASCE.  “These competitions, at both the local and society levels, provide unique challenges and require students to utilize innovative thought processes, collaborative efforts, and advanced engineering knowledge to find solutions. The Society is proud to recognize their exemplary work and wish them luck at the Society-wide Competition in June. However, regardless where they finished in the competitions, we applaud each student and each program that participated in this year’s symposia and recognize the hard work all the students have put in their projects during the school year.”
In its 35th year, the ASCE Concrete Canoe Competition, the student symposium’s flagship event, challenges civil engineering students to apply the engineering principles learned in the classroom to a real-world task, while utilizing project management and team building skills. The Concrete Canoe program consists of both athletic and academic events. The competition is designed to test the knowledge, creativity and stamina of each team. Over the course of the school year, teams plan, research, and construct a canoe out of concrete. The competition evaluates teams on design and construction, a technical proposal, an enhanced focus area, a formal business presentation, and five different races—men’s and women’s slalom races, men’s and women’s sprint races and a co-ed sprint race.

The Society-wide Concrete Canoe Competition+ is organized by ASCE and hosted annually by a university student chapter, thanks in part to funds provided by the ASCE Foundation.

The following schools were represented at the symposium:

  • Arkansas State University
  • Christian Brothers University
  • Lipscomb University
  • Tennessee State University
  • Tennessee Tech University
  • University of Arkansas
  • University of Arkansas at Little Rock
  • University of Memphis
  • University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
  • University of Tennessee at Knoxville
  • University of Tennessee at Martin
  • Vanderbilt University
  • Harding University – guest team

About the American Society of Civil Engineers

Founded in 1852, the American Society of Civil Engineers represents more than 150,000 civil engineers worldwide and is America's oldest national engineering society. ASCE works to raise awareness of the need to maintain and modernize the nation's infrastructure using sustainable and resilient practices, advocates for increasing and optimizing investment in infrastructure, and improve engineering knowledge and competency. For more information, visit www.asce.org or www.infrastructurereportcard.org and follow us on Twitter, @ASCETweets and @ASCEGovRel.